PHILADELPHIA — Saturday, the 76ers won for the first time in two months. Sunday, they had earned a day off. Monday, they will play again.

Nothing’s changed?

“Nothing’s changed. Nothing will change,” Sixers coach Brett Brown said, after his team had vanquished a 26-game losing streak. “We’ll get up and go at it tomorrow. The players, I’m happy for. Perhaps the stigma is a good thing that it’s not attached to their names.”

The Sixers ended a league record-tying losing skid one loss shy of claiming sole possession of it. It’s something of which to be proud, something to celebrate, and something that garners a few pats on the back.

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Fans at Wells Fargo Center recognized that much.

A good chunk of the 17,438 in attendance stuck around Saturday more than 20 minutes after the final horn had sounded, making official the Sixers’ 123-98 win over Detroit. A number of them, behind the Pistons bench, chanted, “Thank you, Detroit!” Two in particular, near the Sixers’ tunnel, had removed brown bags from their heads. Another held a sign that read, “Phinally Won.”

“We just got on a real-bad losing streak,” said Sixers rookie Michael Carter-Williams, “but that didn’t faze us at all.”

As much of a relief as his team’s win over the Pistons must have been, Brown is realistic about the Sixers’ remaining games and beyond. There is no false hope. The plan, he said, remains the same. It’s a plan that’s required patience, a “remarkable” virtue that Brown said he was stunned to learn his team’s fans possess.

The plan for these Sixers is on “a three- to five-year” trajectory, he said. No single victory, no matter how morally uplifting, is going to change that.

“The main thing is — and I know you’ve heard me say this a lot, but I’m going to say it again — we chose a path when Sam was hired,” Brown said, referencing Sixers general manager Sam Hinkie. “And some may agree with it, some may not agree with it. We’re not claiming it to be the correct way to do it, but we’re committed to the plan.

“We don’t want to blink. Times like we’ve just been through teach you a lot about people and how things may sound good at the start of the plan, but then people get wobbly and second-guess things. And we are fully committed to seeing our plan through. We did win tonight, and we beat Miami at the start, and we went on a fantastic four-game winning streak on the road after Christmas, but we’re everyday people.”

The Sixers (16-57) have nine games remaining, including Monday night at Atlanta. There’s a good chance they will lose every last one of them.

But they’ll always have Saturday night, and their eye-popping win over the Pistons. Never has an NBA losing streak of 10 or more games been snapped with a 25-point victory, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. Never had the Sixers built a 30-point lead this season. Never had they figured a 43-percent shooting team would hit 53 percent of its shots against Detroit.

Not like any of those gaudy numbers is going to trigger change from Brown and his team.